The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Water Wednesday - Reality Check: Hot Water in SHTF
Episode Date: February 4, 2026Hot water is absolutely incredible! Thought it aint life and death, Michael Kline does a great podcast about it on today's archived podcast.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com.../podcast/prepper-broadcasting-network--3295097/support.BECOME A SUPPORTER FOR AD FREE PODCASTS, EARLY ACCESS & TONS OF MEMBERS ONLY CONTENT!Get Prepared with Our Incredible Sponsors! Survival Bags, kits, gear www.limatangosurvival.comThe Prepper's Medical Handbook Build Your Medical Cache – Welcome PBN FamilyThe All In One Disaster Relief Device! www.hydronamis.comJoin the Prepper Broadcasting Network for expert insights on #Survival, #Prepping, #SelfReliance, #OffGridLiving, #Homesteading, #Homestead building, #SelfSufficiency, #Permaculture, #OffGrid solutions, and #SHTF preparedness. With diverse hosts and shows, get practical tips to thrive independently – subscribe now!
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Network. We have to hit the reset button and create a true culture of preparedness, starting at a very
young age and filtering all the way up. Well, hello again and welcome back everyone to another
fabishly famous fine and funky episode of Reality Check here on Prepper Broadcasting Network.
Self-reliance and Independence delivered to you 24 hours a day. My name is Michael Klein and I
am your host broadcasting from Reality Check Studios in an undisclosed location in famously hot South
Carolina. We have our satellite in Singapore up and running and we are ready to rock.
I would like to welcome all of our regular domestic listeners as well as all of our international
listeners to the podcast. We thank you all for tuning in and checking out our sponsors.
Don't forget to join our chat room. Head over to pepperbroadcasting.com, click on the blue
button that says join the live chat. From there, you can pick a random screen name or one that
suits you and join in on the fun. Well, before we get started tonight, I got one little announcement
we need to make. So as Preppers, I know we have all been in our bunkers and practicing social distancing
and wearing masks and doing everything that CDC says because we're good little corporate citizens.
Well, I think it's time we all get together and have a powwow. You know, we really test this COVID thing thing.
All right, seriously though. This September, it's happening again. Once again, the one thing the Preppers
always unite for on the East Coast, that is Prepper Camp. Preper Camp 2020.
It is happening September 25th, 26, and 27th at Orchard Lake Campground, the same place it always is.
Go to their website, Preppercamp.com. Check out all the good specials. Check out the tickets. There's the
golden tickets happening right now. So if you are new to prepping and you're new to the Prepper
community, let me explain what Prepper Camp is. Prepper Camp is a three-day outdoors
extravaganza for all things prepping, survival, wilderness, craft, and homesteading.
You know, whether you come for the day or whether you come for the entire weekend,
Prepper Camp is a total immersion event in preparedness, survival, camp craft, off-grid living, and homestating skills.
Every day, you can probably fit in probably about six or eight speakers a day all three days.
You can listen to the speakers.
You can ask questions of them.
Everything's interactive.
They have cooking demonstrations.
They have butchering demonstrations.
They have archery, blacksmithing, beaky,
honey making, alcohol making, just everything, solar, you name it, communications, self-defense,
everything.
This has to offer.
And their speakers there are very, very knowledgeable.
They're the top of the class.
They're the service, the subject matter experts in their area, the ones that are speaking.
But you can schedule the classes, but you can actually have hands-owned activities.
There's a lot of different things where they'll ask the audience to come up in
participate and you can actually learn hands-on how to do stuff. I mean, it's very, very interactive.
And unlike attending an event inside a crowded gymnasium, you know, the German fested convention
centers, Preper Camp is a national event. It's held in the open air outside in the foothills of
Appalachian Mountains located in a campground venue. So if you have an RV or if you have a tent,
you can bring it. You might want to go ahead and if you're thinking about that, go ahead and make plans
for that. But anyway, for all the new people out there,
have never attended pramping camp what you can do is you learn what you need to survive you can meet
the speakers there are vendors that have preparedness items that you can purchase there it's all in an
open-air environment you can swim you can camp you can fish you can boat you can hike you can cook out
i mean it's it's kid friendly it's family friendly a lot of times while prepper camp's going on the
kids will be out in the lake fishing and swimming and whatnot at nighttime there are roundtable
events and they usually have big names like william forstion's usually there
Alan Kay from the Alone series, you know, those kind of people are usually there one or two of the nights that you can actually meet these people and talk to them.
So if you've never been to it before, I highly, highly suggest that you go to PreperCount.
It is an experience in a preparedness conference like no other.
You know, like you bring your family, you're going to meet like-minded people, you're going to listen to Preper music, entertainment,
and you're going to come away with the knowledge, the access to experts, and friends that you, that could have your back in an emergency.
So Prepper Camp 2020, September 25th, 26, and 27th, their website is PreperCamp.com.
P-R-E-P-P-P-E-R-C-A-M-P-C-A-M-P.com.
That is Preper-Camp.com.
The world runs on hot water.
That is something I say to myself when I get into the shower after a long, hard day.
There is a magical moment when you first step into a hot shower or you get into a hot bath,
and that first blast of hot water begins to soothe your soul.
If you don't believe me, try living without it for a few days.
Try taking a bath without hot water or at least warm water.
Try getting your dishes clean or try relieving sore muscles without warm water.
If you're a woman, try living without hot water during your cycle.
Try dealing with all the cramping and all the other joys that come with that time of the month.
If you don't have hot water.
You know, you can only use so many thermicare pads.
And don't forget, cleanliness is next to godliness.
So, the world runs on hot water.
That's going to be our show today.
So today we're talking about on reality check hot water, how to generate it, how to make large quantities of it.
Okay, so in typical reality check fashion, we've got to do a little bit of history, a little bit of sciencey stuff.
So you know how it goes.
All right, here we go.
Starting into it.
Throughout history, oh, got a text message.
Throughout history, hot water has proved to me an integral part.
of a civilized nation.
There is a reason that major civilizations had public bathhouses and samas.
For the Romans, bathing played a major part in ancient Roman culture and society.
It was one of the most common daily activities in Roman culture,
and it was practiced across a wide variety of social classes.
Throughout many contemporary cultures, they see bathing as kind of a private activity
that you're supposed to be conducted in the home.
However, bathing in Rome was a communal activity.
Now, only the extremely wealthy could afford bathing facilities in their home, so most people bathed in the communal baths, and they were called, du-d-dramural, thurme.
Sounds like a word we used today, isn't it?
In some ways, these resembled modern-day spas.
The Romans raised bathing to a high art as they socialized in these communal baths.
The communal baths were available in temples, such as like the Imperial Fora, courtship was conducted there, business deals were sealed, all kinds of important transatlances.
transactions were conducted in these thermae or public baths. Most often these thermae or public baths
were built as very, very lavish bathhouses, and they were often on a natural hot spring.
The main component of this section here is the word thermay. It comes from the Greek word
thermos, meaning hot. Fresh water would be heated by fire and channeled into the various
bathing rooms, speaking of rooms. To give you an idea of how important hot water and bathing was to the
Romans, they actually divided the bathhouse into multiple chambers with each room serving a specific
purpose. You know, when you look at pictures of the Roman bathhouse, it just looks like a gigantic
open pool. And that's what people imagine is the bathhouse just a heated swimming pool, but it's
actually much more than that. If you have time and nothing to do and want to take a good history
lesson, take a look at all the different rooms that make up the Thurban. There are many, many rooms,
and I know I'm going to butcher these names, and if you're a professor of Roman history or Greek,
then forgive me for the way I pronounce these, but this, you know, I was raised in the
south.
This is the best I can pronounce with my southern.
So the rooms that make up the thermae are the atrium, the apoditarium, the frigidarium,
which is where we get our word frigidium, the tepidarium, which is tepid, or meaning lukewarm,
the hippocost, the calderium, hmm, maybe cauldron, the laconium or the pseudatorium,
which is also where we get our word sauna, and a steam room, no doubt.
And then there were side rooms such as the prefernium, like furnace, prefernium, or the funnicatoris, root word here being, again, furnace.
Anywho, in many ways, the baths were ancient Romans equivalent of a community center.
You know, instead of a giant open room with tables and chairs where you play bingo, you had a giant open room where everybody was naked and bathing in hot water.
Seems legit.
Because the bathing process took so long, conversation was necessary.
Many Romans would use the bath as a place to invite friends to dinner parties.
Many politicians would go there to bathe and convince fellow Romans to join their causes.
You know, just kind of all sorts of things where you would get together.
It's kind of like the community barbecue today, except for you were just, you were, you know, we were taking a bath.
But it's same difference.
You know, you go there, you meet, you fellowship, you talk about business, you try to get people to believe what you're talking about, you know, that kind of thing.
One of the problems, though, that the Romans had was bacteria.
While the baths were enjoyed by almost every Roman, there were those who criticized them.
The water was not renewed often, and the remains of oil, dirt, or even excrement were kept warm and in a soup and provided a great petri dish for bacteria to grow.
The Emperor Marcus Aurelius complained about the dirtiest.
Celsius, which is where we get the term Celsius, the temperature thing, Celsius, that was his name,
while commending its therapeutic virtues warns not to go with a fresh wound because of the risk of gangrene.
And in fact, several tombstones from across the empire claim, now this is on somebody's tombstone.
They claim, quote, baths, wine, and sex corrupt our bodies, but baths, wine, and sex make life worth living.
Okay.
Next up worth mentioning are the Turkish baths.
So that's the Romans.
Next up are the Turks.
Unlike the Romans, the Turks, the Ottomans, the Arabs, and the Syrians use hot air to heat the rooms and then cool flowing water to rinse with.
This helped to reduce the infections caused by the Roman baths.
In modern times, we would associate this hot air technology with like the Russian steam bath or like the Finnish sauna.
So you think about it.
The Romans, what they basically did is they would heat up hot water in a chamber.
They would pump or pipe that hot water throughout the building,
and everybody would bathe in the different pools of water,
either the lukewarm water or the hot water or the cool water or whatnot.
But then that water was never drained, really.
I mean, it drained off because there was constant fresh water being pushed in.
But for the lack, more or less, for the lack of it, there was never a drain.
There was never a pump system.
There was never, you know, what we would associate with like a modern sauna or modern jacuzzi or whirlpool or whatever you want to call it.
Theirs was they just had a gigantic pool that filled up with hot water and occasionally, you know, it cycled off a gallon to here and there.
But, you know, if you've ever, like, poured oil on top of a pool or had something spill and it go into your pool, you know how the oil slick is?
Imagine that.
Because you know the Romans oiled up with everything and all the perfumes and all the smell of it.
goods and all that kind of stuff that had to be washed off.
And, you know, if you were there first in the day, there's probably not bad.
But if you were there, you know, late in the day after everybody else, Jesus.
Anyway, all right.
And so enough of the Romans and that stuff.
Let's jump over to the Turks.
So I talked about the hot air, the Turks using hot air to heat rooms and whatnot.
We know that hot water played an important life in the past.
But now let's jump into some of the benefits that hot water provide us today.
So it's not just, you know, when you have a S-H-T-F situation, it's not going to be just having a source of clean water.
It's having water, it's having a way to reliably heat the water for our use.
Okay, so talking about benefits.
First off, cold water, because, you know, we can't talk about the benefits of water without going through the cold water first.
So let's get cold water out of the way, even though it's a hot water show.
When you immerse your body in cold water or even take a cold shower,
colder temperature of the water improves circulation because the body reacts by pumping blood more
efficiently. Blood helps bring more oxygen to the muscles and the tissues, which can help relieve
swelling and remove lactic acid. Improved circulation is good for the body overall, including
the heart. So some athletes or fitness enthusiasts may use cold water or ice baths to help
muscle tissue repair itself after finishing a workout. I know you've seen this and some of you
may practice it. After you've had a really, really hard, strenuous workout, you take an ice bath or you
take a cold water bath. Well, the reason why is because it helps your muscles. However, for today's
show, we're focusing on hot water. The reason people enjoy soaking in the tub of hot water or
taking a long, hot shower is simple. It's relaxing. Immersing the body in hot water can help
relieve tension, relieves stress, relieves muscle pain. The temperature of the water also helps increase
circulation throughout the body.
Being in the water helps give you your body a break from gravity.
So that's a huge thing.
You know, they have the aqua therapy where you do in the pool or they have the
immersion pools where you're completely submerged.
Part of that is to experience some form of weightlessness or, you know, less gravity so that,
you know, it doesn't hurt your joints as much.
I know a lot of elderly people really, really benefit from that.
When they have aqua therapy, they're in the pool.
They can do workout stuff in the pool.
and there's not as much gravity pulling on their joints,
so it's a lot easier to do stuff.
Plus the water has a good resistance.
But anyway, I digress.
Water helps give you, taking a bath,
and soaking gives your body a break from gravity, so to speak.
A recent digital health and wellness booklet
from the National Swimming Pool Foundation,
God, I didn't even know there was one,
and Dr. B. Smith shed some light on some surprising findings.
Here are just some of the ways that you can benefit
from soaking in a hot water bath,
as supported by a growing body of scientific research, all the good buffins.
All right, number one.
Healing.
Immersion in hot water increases blood circulation.
More blood flow means more nutrients are available to help cells regenerate,
and it speeds the healing process.
Number two is muscle pain relief.
The increase in blood circulation helps to remove pain-causing chemicals that build up in the tissues.
As a result, muscle pain goes away faster.
Number three, joint pain relief, the blood.
buoyancy of water acts as a buffer against the effects of gravity on an injured joint,
like we were saying earlier.
Lower blood pressure.
Most people see their blood pressure go down when they are immersed in hot water.
Again, relieve stress, although other good stuff makes sense.
A healthier heart.
When a person is immersed in warm water, the heart is working harder and more efficiently,
similar to how it benefits from exercise.
Hey, there we go.
I can take a hot bath in lieu of exercise.
That works for me.
Number six is stress relief.
Warm water immersion provides a safe, relaxing way to unwind, reduce anxiety, and cope more efficiently with the challenges of daily life.
Makes sense.
Number seven, improved mental health.
Scientific evidence shows that immersion in water helps us to reduce the effects of stress contributed to improve mental help.
Well, duh.
I mean, it's kind of a given that anybody that knows that if you get in there,
women especially you know you go you get a hot bath you light a candle you get a glass of white
wine preferably a pinot grigio not that shardinay crap and you get in there and you sip half your
glass and you sit down and you close your eyes and you have the candle going maybe some soft music
and you just let the cares go away and you just sit there for a few minutes and you just enjoy
quiet or enjoy your music and then you enjoy just you know try to zone out for a minute well that
helps your body mentally and it helps your body physically and
And don't judge me for doing what I do on the weekends.
All right, anyway.
I think the stress, the relief, and the mental aspect of the hot water bath is the best thing for me.
You know, after working out in the yard or working on a project, I'm dirty, I'm greasy, you know, you just feel itchy, your hair's all matted together.
And there are times when I've sweated and I've gotten dirty, my face feels oily.
Or for the ladies, you know, your boob sweat makes you feel like you need a little bath.
You know, think about this scenario.
For the soldiers out there, you can relate.
So, you go out on patrol, you're on a mission on a hot summer day,
and you completely soak all of your clothes and sweat.
Plus, it's a little dusty, and the dirt has stuck to your skin.
You want nothing more than to take a shower or at least get some wet wipes to clean up.
Know what I'm saying? Keep them wet wipes.
Or, let's say you go out camping for a few days and you finally get back home.
The first thing you want to do is take a bath, put on some clean clothes,
order a pizza, am I right? What I'm getting at here is that the mental aspect, once you dry off,
you feel better, you feel clean, your skin feels clean. You know, it may only last a few minutes
to you start sweating again, but there is nothing like getting a good shower, getting really clean
and scrubbed down, drying off, and then putting on fresh, clean clothes to have a mental boost.
I mean, that is a what we would call in the survival industry, a force multiplier of
sorts because it's a mental boost. This is what we're getting at. The mental boost you get from
taking a bath and not just a bath, a hot bath. I mean, a cold water shower is one thing, but, you know,
hot water just makes all the difference in the world. So when the balloon finally does go up and it all
goes to pot, you are going to be subjected to some major mental stresses. You're going to have to
work harder than you ever have. You're not going to have air conditioning. Well, that is unless you
listen to my off-grid AC show.
If you listen to that show, you might have off-grid air conditioning.
I mean, anyway, you're going to be a lot dirtier.
So you're going to have more sore muscles.
This is why it's going to be important to have a way of hot water.
So in our seditary lifestyle, and right now, now, shout out to the people that are on the
farms and are doing the farm work and doing homesteading, because you're already there.
You already know what I'm talking about.
But for us silly duetters and silly slickers and armchair quarterback.
and armchair social justice warriors and armchair preppers and whatnot.
When we actually have to get off our butt and do real work,
we're going to find that we get a lot dirtier,
we sweat a lot more,
and we're going to be just overall sore, nasty, terrible,
and having a hot shower is going to help with that.
Well, this is why it's important to have hot water.
And I am not talking about heating up water on the stove.
For all of you out there that are thinking that you're just going to take a pot,
You're going to fill it from water from the creek.
You're going to put it on the stove and you're going to heat it up and that's how you're going to bathe.
I have two words for you.
Try it.
Try doing that.
The next time you mow your lawn or you're working outside in the yard for a few hours and you're greasy and you're hot and you're dirty or you've been out rolling in the dirt for whatever reason, come back inside and rather than go in and get in the shower, get a pot, put it on the stove.
Turn that water on or turn the fire on and begin heating that water.
up. Go ahead and see how long it takes you to heat that gallon or two of water. Once the water gets
hot, take a bath with it. Number one, where are you going to bathe? Can you haul that hot water up to
your bathroom and wipe down? Number two, you're going to find that there's not going to be enough water.
You know, if you don't mind taking a spit bath, then that's cool. But what if you actually need to
soak? What if you actually need to, you know, really wash your hair and maybe wash it twice?
You're going to find out that a pot of water on the stove doesn't get you a large quantity of hot water.
Yes, sure, it's hot water, yet it's going to be nice.
But again, if you like spit baths, then hey, go for it.
But otherwise, it's not going to work.
What if you've sprained your muscle or you've got something and you need to actually soak?
What if you need to soak in eps and salts?
What if you're a woman and you're on your period and you're having cramps?
You know, a pot on the stove isn't going to cut it.
What if you have a very bad gas pain and you just need to soak in order to get your lower GI moving?
I know there's some of you out there that got that problem.
You get gas bubbles and they don't move and you have to go soak in a warm bath.
How are you going to do that with a pot on the stove?
Sometimes you actually need to submerse yourself in hot water and that means a bath.
Now, I'm not too sure many of you actually have scullery made that can heat up the water, bring it up.
fill your bathtub and anyway anyway we'll get off that subject if you think you're just going to heat up water on the stove go ahead and try it that that's my advice if you if you think hot water on the stove is going to be enough for me and my family to bathe and cook with and do whatnot and wash clothes during the apocalypse go for it you try it you just just put your money where your mouth is and try it
I think what you're going to find out is you're actually going to need a lot more water than that pot on the stove can provide.
And this is especially true for a family.
Are you going to heat that pot up and use the fuel for each person?
So, you know, not only thinking about just the pot of hot water, how much wood or gas are you using to be able to heat that water up?
You know, think of the fuel costs for each person to have a pot of hot water.
You know, in the old days, a lot of people would reuse the bath water for the next person.
You know, you get the one person that was the least dirty and maybe goes down to the next least dirty and then the next dirty and then the dirty and then finally the dirtiest or maybe it was the other way around.
But anyway, a lot of times the dirtiest people would have their own pot, but the least dirty ones are the ones that stayed in the house all day, they may have to reuse the same bathwater for everybody.
No thank you.
As for me and my house, we want to take a shower.
Another aspect to think about is having enough hot water to wash clothes and dishes.
Ladies, you know what I'm talking about here, when you have to use hot water on clothes as opposed to cold water.
Sometimes there are things you don't want hot water for.
Blood, for instance.
You don't want to use hot water to cling blood off clothes.
It'll set it.
Use cold water.
Cold water's great.
They have dish detergent that is, I mean, not dish detergent.
Well, I guess they do have dish detergent that's designed for cold water.
but they have laundry detergent that's actually designed for cold water.
But why do you have to specifically design laundry detergent for cold water?
Every other laundry detergent is designed for hot water.
And a lot of times you need that hot water in order to melt the oils and the grease to get them to emulsify to the soap.
Also in that same vein is dishes.
You know, dishes maybe not so much because technically you can wash all of your dishes with the pot on the stove
and it can be, you know, cool water or warm water.
But anyway, wash some clothes.
That needs hot water.
That might actually need a few pots,
and it might be easier to have an on-demand hot water
instead of just waiting on a pot to boil.
So how do we do that?
How do we take a good hot shower when there is no power?
Well, I'm glad you've asked.
For the rest of the show,
we're going to be looking at the best ways to generate adequate quantities of hot water.
So we know we need hot water.
We know we need a lot of hot water.
How do we do that technically in an off-grid situation?
Well, we've determined that we need to make a lot of hot water.
How do we do that?
Well, the big question is that depends on your fuel type.
If you were smart and you stockpiled propane,
then one of the easiest ways to get hot water is a propane heater.
There are a lot of options out there,
but the two main ones come down to either using a 20-pound cylinder,
like what you do on your gas grill,
or the little small one-pound disposable green cylinders.
You may know these is a camp shower.
Oh, and by the way, that black bag you hang up at your camp,
site, you know, the Coleman thing, that it's black and you fill it with water and you set it
out at the sun all day long and then at night you use that little bag to shower off. Yeah, that's
like the pot. That thing only holds like a gallon or a half gallon. You're not going to have
enough hot water out of that. Maybe if you rinsed off, soaked up, and then rinsed off again,
you might squeeze by, but it just, just for you. Anyway, it works, but it's not perfect.
like I said, you know, try it.
I suggest you try it.
If you have that and you're like, well, this is what's in my pack.
This is what I'm going to be using.
Okay, sure, go for it.
What I'm talking about are the portable or instant slash on-demand water heaters.
Okay, first up is the Camp Chef.
And by the way, I'm not endorsing any of these.
This is just research.
And here's what I found.
And if I misspeak, then blame Google, not me.
Anyway, first up is the Camp Chef, HWD5.
That is Hotel Whiskey Delta.
Alta 5. Camp Chef HWD5 Triton Water Heater. This is one of the most popular camping water
heaters slash showers on the market. The water heater first hit the market in 2008 and has a long
and great track record with many positive reviews. The Camp Chef camping water heater has a very
simple design. It's easy to use. In fact, the water heater only has two control knobs on the
front of the unit, the heat and the pressure. There are only three connections that is needed and it can
make up to one and a half gallons of hot water a minute, which is actually a pretty good thing.
So one and a half gallons of hot water a minute, and that includes the propane connection.
It includes a water inlet hose connection and the water outlet hose connection.
So water in, gas in, hot water out.
There you go.
There's no need to worry about lighting a pilot light.
This unit has the built-in igniter that automatically lights the pilot light that uses 2D batteries.
This portable propane water heater also has many great features, including a 72-inch shower hose,
Leave me, a long shower hose is worth it.
Has brackets for easy mounting and a foresetting shower head.
You know, the Pulse, say, rain shower, all that kind of good stuff.
The Camp Chef does not have a built-in pump to send the water through the camping heater.
As with many portable water heaters, this unit requires pressurized water source to function,
such as at your home or campsite water connection.
This is because the portable water heater requires pressurized water source.
It does not work for remote camping or anywhere that does not have a pressurized water source.
Here is our first problem.
So we have a way to generate hot water, but we have to have it under pressure.
Normally that means household pressure or camp pressure.
So if you're at a campsite, no big deal.
But if you're ShtF and there's no electricity and there's no water coming from the city,
you know, if you remember back to my show, how long will utilities last?
There's a reason while I did that show.
The way to get pressure in this case is you have to have a pump.
In my case, it's going to be 12-volt pump.
Or you could read that as me saying, you need to get a 12-volt pump.
So the pros of the Camp Chef for it's easy to use, powerful heating, 34,000 BTU,
and there's a lot of monitoring options.
There's a lot of mounting options.
The cons are there's no way to manually ignite the heater.
so if the battery ignition system fails, your SOL,
there has been a few complaints of poor build quality,
and the biggest one is it needs pressure or rise to water to work.
Number two is the Zodi Outback Gear Hot Tap Travel Shower.
E-I-E-O, that's a mouthful.
The Zodi Z-O-D-I-Z-O-D-I-Zulu-O-D-D-L-A-L-Nia.
Zodi, Outback Gear, Hot-T-Tap Travel Shower.
If you are camping in a remote area with no reliable or pressurized water source, then the Zodi is for you.
The Zodi Travel Shower comes with its own pump.
You know, I should be on like the prices, right, reading off prices and stuff.
You know, what do we have in the tongue, Bob?
Well, tonight, behind door number three is the Zodi Travel Shower.
The Zoddy Travel Shower comes with its own pump that runs off of D batteries, allowing this water heater to pressurize and send the water through the heating element for your hot shower.
This means that you can literally take a shower anywhere
with this self-contained portable camping water heater, Bob.
I'll shut up.
Anyway, seriously, everything you need packs into a handy, hard plastic storage case,
doubles as kind of like a water tank at the campsite, sort of.
To take a hot shower while camping, what you do is you unpack the heating element,
you unhack the hoses, the pump from the storage case,
you connect the heating element to a 16-ounce propane cylinder
of those little green things that you put like on a lantern or that you screw into the side of a camp stove, the 16 ounce propane cylinder.
So you connect the propane.
It has an adapter where it can go with a bigger tank.
You submerge the pump into a water source, such as the storage cage or maybe an igloo cooler filled with water.
So if you've got an igloo cooler at all, the ice is melted, don't pour that out.
Put the pump in there and then use that water to heat it up and take a bath with.
Zoddy is located in Midvale, Utah, and they are known for their high-quality well-built heaters.
Hint, hint, built Made in America, not cheap, Chinese junk.
In fact, their products are so trusted that the military, firefighters, and EMS all use variations of their product.
Heck, my dad even uses one.
Well, a little side story here.
My dad survived Hurricane Michael, and I know y'all probably heard me talk about Hurricane Michael,
and it was an absolute disaster for North Florida.
Every one of my family was affected by that.
And most all of my old friends,
basically everybody I've known for the past 35 years,
was affected by that storm in a very, very, very bad way.
My dad did not get electricity from the day the storm hit
to the time he got power back was 28 days.
You know, can you survive without electricity,
without taking a hot shower,
without maybe getting a hot meal for 28 days.
One thing he did have was this.
He had a Zodi.
I don't know what model he had,
and I don't know how it worked,
but I know that he and his wife took hot showers outside,
mind you,
but they were able to take hot showers with this little Zodi.
Now, it's, you know, you rinse off,
you soap up, you scrub down good,
and then you turn the Zodi back on to rents off.
So it's kind of, you know, it helps if there's two people there.
especially if it's a husband and wife team, then you're not worried about anything or, you know, mom and the kids, whatnot.
Or dad and the boys, whatever.
But he complains about everything and he loves his.
So if my dad likes it, then it's probably a pretty good product.
Some of the pros include it does not need pressurized water.
It is compact.
It's easy to transport.
There are quality materials.
It's quality design.
Some of the cons are there's no recirculator.
Now, what this means is it doesn't, well, you know what, you just Google it yourself.
No recirculator for the water source.
The other con and the big con is that it'll use a lot of D batteries.
Now, I could see that if you had lantern batteries and a solar cell, then you could probably set up something that would have, you know, a bigger power source.
But either way, the biggest complaint is it sucks through D batteries, and that can be a bad thing, especially in, you know, ShtF.
Let's see.
You also need to keep it.
the shower short and to the point when you're using this camp heater. The manufacturer states that the unit will heat 60 plus gallons of water between battery and propane refills. So that's not a bad thing, but again, like I said earlier, you're probably going to want to rinse off, soap up, scrub down good, and then rinse off again. You know, you just turn it on, you wet your skin, you wet your hair, then you turn it off. Then you use the soap and the shampoo and you scrub down good and you lather up good. Then you turn the pump back on and you finish
rinsing off and by then,
voila, you're hot and clean.
Anywho.
Third on my list,
and in the same vein,
is the Zodi Outback
Gear Extreme SC
hot shower. I'll say it again.
Zodi, ZODI,
Outback Gear Extreme
SC hot shower.
This unique water heater with a
cylindrical design and a wide way of features
has an outer stainless steel cover
that ensures durability and protection from rust.
It comes with excessive
It comes with an accessory bag that you can store the heater and a stove.
Therefore, you get more value for your money.
It is environmentally friendly design that puts the pump on top of the tank instead of batteries to pressurize the water.
The outback has a B2Burner to hit the water.
Water is heated up to 100 degrees Fahrenheit in about 5 or 10 minutes.
On its surface is a temperature strip that acts as a thermometer and displays the current water temperature.
The water heater has a shower holder and also comes with a stove.
It'll store about three gallons of hot water.
The stove is used to heat the water in the tank.
It can also be used for cooking, hence you get double benefit from using this heater.
This best portable, let's see, this best portable hot water shower heater also comes with a long hose
and a showerhead that's perfectly designed to purposely save water.
You can obviously tell I'm reading this from the manufacturer's thing.
I just did my research, figured out what I wanted to say and then pasted it in my notes,
and I'm reading from their stuff, so forgive me.
Let's see.
Some of the pros of this
Zodi Outback Gear Extreme
SC Hot Shower
is it's easy to operate,
fast heating of water,
water-saving showerhead,
you know, for all you green tree-hugging people.
Presence of a water
temperature gauge,
unique design,
which is rust-free stainless steel outer covering,
comes with a stove to heat the water.
The stove can be used for cooking.
Some of the cons are you need to be really careful
when placing the tank on top of the burner
or when taking it off.
So apparently it's not a continuous unit.
It actually is just putting a pot on the stove.
I don't know.
I'll have to look this up and see what that one is.
That's funny.
Now that I read that.
Pays to read your show notes before the show, huh?
Whoops.
Apparently that's a pot on the stove.
Maybe it's like a moonshine steel
that you put on top of the thing.
I don't know.
Anyway.
Fourth on my list is the EcoTemp L10
portable outdoor tankless water heater.
Eco Temp, E-C-C-O-Temp, L-10
Portable Outdoor Tankless Water Heater.
This portable propane water heater
by E-O-Temp, you know what, before I get
into that, I know that's the fourth one on the list.
Let's go ahead and take a break. Let's pay some bills. I've got to get a sip of water.
I am dying here. Let's do a, take a break.
We'll pay our bills, listen to some sponsors.
Let me wet my whistle, and we will be right back.
Preper Camp.
is a total immersion experience.
The more time you get to spend with your fellow preppers, the better.
But I did come mainly to network and mean other people.
I mean, you can go to a daytime event where it's at a conference center.
You talk a little bit, but when you're camping,
you get to actually spend the whole day with them, sit around the campfire,
listen to music, share stories, share meals.
We wanted an experience that we would want to go to.
Well, we have people who have come here from literally all over the country,
over the country, from California to Maine to Texas,
to the Canadian border.
I am just absolutely amazed at what kind of investment
these people have made, not just in buying tickets,
but in getting here.
We had speakers that wanted to be part of something like this.
It was six speakers an hour all day, three days for the event.
I enjoy the classes.
I didn't get a chance to go as many as I'd like to,
but the classes are always very well put on
and they're very educational.
I think the instructors here are very well educated in their area of expertise that you come
to it and people are living this, that this is what they do on a daily basis.
We've had a good time.
My kids have run around, they've played, they've gotten muddy, they've gotten wet, they've
met other children to play with.
You go to an expo, you walk around, you look at the vendors, you go to a class here and there,
and you go home.
In this type of a venue, it was more of like a summer camp.
For more information and tickets, go to Preppercamp.
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to pick up where we left off. Fourth on my list is the EcoTemp L10 portable outdoor tankless water
heater. This portable propane water heater by EcoTemp has a 10-liter capacity. It's rated at 74,500 BTUs,
making it one of the largest and most powerful water heaters on the market. This one is great if you're
going to be camping for a long duration or if you're setting up.
up a semi-permanent shower situation like a bugout location.
This unit runs off a standard propane gas grill tank and requires 2D batteries for ignition.
However, as with the camp chef mentioned earlier, this one requires a pressurized water source.
It does not include a pump, and if you're a remote camping with no source of pressurized water,
this one's not going to work.
This one does offer convenient and easy-to-use features, like it has a 20-minute safety
shut-off timer, battery-powered ignition, and automatic pressure activation, meaning when you turn on the hot water, the heater turns on and starts making hot water. When you turn off the hot water valve, the heater shuts off.
Pros are basically unlimited hot water from a 74,000 BTU heater. In other words, a lot of hot water. The cons are that it requires pressurized water source. It is also large and bulky. It is less portable. And there's been a few customer complaints.
from poor build qualities. However, overall, it's a decent system.
A lot of times this is used, if you've got a spicket, imagine if you've got a farm,
and you've got a water pipe run to the end of your paddock, and it's, you know, I don't know.
Let's say it's a couple hundred feet away from the house.
You can put this thing there and have a source of hot water. That's what it's good for.
Fifth, and the one that I like, I think this is one similar to what I have, is the campus,
Camp Lux, C-A-M-P-L-U-X.
The Camp-L-1.32 G-P-M portable water heater.
So the 5-L-1.32, G-A-M-P-P-A-P-P-A-P portable water heater.
The Camp-L-L-1-3-2 G-P-M portable water heater.
The Camp-Lux water heater uses propane gas to heat the water.
Hot water flow is instant once you turn on the heater.
It can be connected to a garden hose.
with two garden hose attachments. Both of them are one and a half inches in diameter.
One of the hoses is female while the other is male. The water heater requires very low water
pressure to operate, about 0.4 PSI. The flow of water is also adjustable. 2D batteries are
environmentally friendly. Of course they do the ignition. The water capacity of this heater is
5 liters with a flow of 1.3 gallons per minute. It's designed with an oxygen depletion
sensor, this heater is therefore suitable for indoor use. That's a good one. Indoor use. However,
ensure that the room where it is to be used is well ventilated, blah, blah, blah. If you want a
compact water heater, try this one. Its size is compact. It features a folding handle, makes it
convenient to use indoors and out. Operating this water heater as a portable water heater is
pretty easy. All you really need to do is just install it on the wall, make the necessary
connections, which again is going to be cold water, gas, hot water to the hose, you know,
to your shower thing, and you turn it on and it does its thing. Some of the pros are, requires
low pressure to operate. It's got energy saving technology. It's safe since it has an automatic
shutoff system. It comes with a variety of attachments. It can be used indoors if you have
ventilation and the hot water supply is instant once you turn it on. However, well, some of the
cons are while it is when you go to connect it to the regulator you really have to pay attention to
where you're setting the gasket so the only con to this one is pay attention when you hook the gas up
so this one is similar to the one that i bought mine was a package that also came with a 12-volt
water pump and all of the hosing to hook it up all i really need for mine is just a bucket of water
and a tank of propane it has everything else i mean it's compact enough that it stays in my bug-out
pile so that if I ever have to leave, it goes with me.
Okay, last one I'm going to talk about tonight as far as propane systems.
For all of you Coleman campers out there that want all the work done for you, I suggest the
Coleman H2 Oasis, like H2Oasis, H2 Oasis.
The Coleman H2 Oasis portable.
This is an all-in-one package.
The Coleman water heater is a compact, portable, and it is powered by a propane tank.
you know, the little small screw in tanks.
The pump is operated using a lithium ion battery.
Thank you, I agree. I know you're making fun of me for saying that.
The pump is connected to a water carrier of five gallons,
and when it turns on, it can produce hot water within the first 30 seconds.
Another great thing about this product is that it can heat water up to 125 degrees.
The heater distributes hot water within 30 seconds, so you don't have to wait long.
The heater has a unique flow technology that gives a consistent performance all of the time.
And in stream conditions, you will always get the best performance.
It has a six-foot hose, which is long and convenient for a wide variety of uses.
Who would not want such a heater?
Well, I for one, because.
While the pros are, it has a long six-foot hose, the shower heads adjustable, it's easy to carry, can be dismental to fit in a bag,
the presence of a rechargeable battery, on-demand hot water,
water technology and the presence of an LED to show the status of the heater, it requires carefully
assembly and dismantling of the heater. I've looked at this thing and while it's great and it's like
an all in one package, it's basically kind of like a water heater in a suitcase and, you know,
everything's going there. You have to disassemble it and reassemble it every time you want to hook
it up and you've got to be careful with that because a lot of it's plastic and a lot of it,
you know, you can over tighten parts and all that kind of good stuff. I have people that I know that have
these and they love them, they just don't ever disassemble them. They get them, they put them together
one time, and then they just put it back in the box, and it stays assembled, ready to go. And I guess
it works. I mean, I guess it's good. They don't have any complaints, but anyway, not for me. I have a
bigger list of all the heaters, but I'm not going to talk about them. You can go online and you can
search camping heater, you know, propane, portable propane water heater, and you'll get just tons and
tons of them. I just hit a couple of the high ones that are really, really good, but then have
the faults with them. And this is all well and good and whatnot as far as being able to generate
hot water for bathing, washing, cleaning. You know, my choice is going to be the portable
hot water heater like the one I mentioned. The Camp Lux, I had to scroll back up. The Camp Lux,
I mean, it's got the most bang for the buck of what I want. The biggest issue that I have is the need
of a water pump and propane.
You know, if you have a 12-volt pump,
like I did, mine came with, when I bought my water heater,
I got it off Amazon,
mine came with a 12-volt water pump as part of the package.
And so all I have to do is provide propane,
a water source, and a battery, and it does the rest.
And that's good for me.
And it's designed for, when I was thinking it,
I was thinking of designing it, of, you know,
taking it to a campground and setting it up
on a semi-permanent basis.
Anyway.
So if you have a 12-volt,
pump and you've got a battery and some solar panels and you know 100 pounds of propane you should be good
and you should be able to conserve you know conservation there don't just waste it but you should be
able to generate hot water for a good good while um i say conservatively as in you know you turn on the
water you rinse off you soap up lather up and then you walk turn off the water i mean um turn on the
water rinse off turn off the water soap up scrub down lather on
all that kind of good stuff, turn on the water and then rinse off. You don't just leave the hot water going the whole time.
You can. There's nothing wrong with that, but just know that you're sucking up battery power and you're sucking up propane, and after the balloon goes up, the propane is going to be a precious commodity.
And here's also our problem, propane.
You know, what do we do after the propane goes out?
It's all well and good if we have gas.
But what if we have no propane or what if this event has rolled on long enough that you've run out of gas?
Now, you got it.
You conserved it and you were able to squeeze, let's say, three or four months of showers out of the thing and that's great.
But now we're on the six month mark and we have no more propane.
What do we do?
Well, then we're back to heating the pot on the stove.
Well, maybe.
A moonshine steel is where we need to look next.
Now, stay with me, my gray.
Don't get too excited.
Chill.
The modern distillery is usually heated with steam.
A coil of pipe runs around inside of the steel, and steam is sent to that pipe.
That steam heats up the pipe, the pipe heats up the mash, and there's a lot of energy in steam.
We can use this for a lot of things, but let's start small.
At the bottom end of the technology is a simple coil of wire filled with water and placed into a fire.
So think about this, we're going to go very, very basic, very old school.
We take a copper or galvanized pipe with a large surface area,
meaning a lot of coils or a lot of S shapes, and we put heat to it.
The idea is that you would have two buckets and hoses connected to the coil of the metal pipe.
One bucket being in higher elevation than the other.
You fill the higher bucket with water.
You place the coils of pipe into the fire of coals,
and you begin slowly pouring water into the upper end of the pipe
and let the water flow through the bottom into the lower bucket.
The cold water enters high, drains into the lower bucket by passing through the hot coil.
The hotter the water, you could run through it a few times.
You know, if you want it to, you have two buckets, and you have, like, basically an open-ended pipe.
You take the top bucket, and you're slowly pouring water into the top section of the coil.
The water is using gravity to go down through the coils.
It's getting hot, and it's coming out into the bottom bucket.
you know, warm. And then you just repeat the process. You grab the bottom bucket that's now got
warm water. You put the empty bucket underneath the pipe. And then you go up stop and you start pouring
and you just make a few cycles and then you can get your water hotter and hotter. You can also
consequently do that same thing with like the Zodis and some of the other camp showers. If you have
like a five gallon bucket or 10 gallons or whatever in your water source, if it's a confined water
source, you can basically pump the pump in the water, run it through the heater, let the showerhead just sit back in the pump, and the pump is going to recirculate the hot water and it's going to get hotter and hotter and hotter every time you do that. I don't think you're going to need to do that because most of the propane water heaters that we talked about, heated the water up really, really hot, and you're actually, you'll get it too hot very quickly. So there's that. But anyway, if you just have wood and some metal pipe and a couple of buckets, you can make.
enough hot water to take a decent bath with and you like I said you can go through one or twice
and you know the hotter the water you get the more times you run it through it kind of thing
one thing though do not leave an empty coil in the fire that is bad mojo if you pour your
water into a red hot pipe it's going to number one weaken the metal and number two you're
going to have a steam bath and probably even a steam explosion so it might be a good idea to have
like two people and be constantly pouring water through the coils while the coils are in the fire
because number one you're going to weaken the metal and number two you could have steam explosion.
All right. Next up the scale is the concept of a heat exchanger. So simple coil in the fire, now we have a
heat exchanger. You have two coils of pipe in a closed system with one coil in the fire and another
coil in the water that you want to heat up and the water in the pipe itself. Place one coil in the
fire will heat the water up and a natural convection will occur when super hot water will move into
the cooler coil. The hot water will then transfer the energy to the bucket of the water you're
trying to heat. It sounds kind of complicated, but if you just Google a heat exchanger or if you
look for a pressurized water reactor, like a nuclear reactor, it's the same kind of concept.
You have a closed section of pipe, one hot, one cold section. The hot section is in the fire,
the cold section is in the water that you want to use.
The water in the hot section gets hot flows into the cold section.
The cold section flows into the hot section.
The hot water will heat the pipe up in the cold section,
which will then heat the water up that you want to use.
And like I said, it sounds kind of complicated,
and it's really hard to explain it on the radio here.
But if you Google Heat Exchanger or if you look at a pressurized water reactor,
it's kind of the same concept.
You know, if you want more information,
hit me up on Facebook.
I can post some graphics or YouTube
or we can jump in Discord
and discuss it on the Discord channel
and I can show you some videos,
some YouTube videos
that'll kind of walk you through the process
if you're interested.
All right.
So we have steam.
The issues with both of these
is we need wood.
If you remember my cooking site and smell
and opsec shows,
a lot of fire and a lot of smoke
may not be a good thing
if you're trying to lay low.
So what about a passive solar water heater?
This is kind of an obvious solution.
You know, there's, you don't want to have the fire.
You don't want to waste the propane.
You don't want to have a lot of wood burning because the smoke could give you away.
What if you just want a passive water heater that will heat up water during the day
and then you can use it at night?
Well, you know, the obvious solution here is a whole house water heater that you mount on your roof.
You know, you've searched these, you've seen these on top of people's roofs,
they have the solar water heater, and it's for their whole house.
You can search for vacuum tube solar water heater, and, you know, there you go, perfect solution.
However, most of these systems are going to be over $1,000, and they still require electricity,
mainly to circulate the water.
I don't know if you've ever seen one of these, excuse me, I don't know if you've ever seen how one of these works,
but you have a gigantic water tank with a pump, and during the day, when the sun's really, really hot,
and it's heating the water up, what it does is there's just,
temperatures in the pipes and there's temperatures in the solar array and there's temperatures in the
tank and the circulator pumps come on and they move the hot water from the solar system down into
a thermal holding tank they move the colder cold er water in the holding tank up to the roof to
heat up and the thing runs throughout the day keeping the water in the tank at a constant you know temperature
so that it's not too hot not too cold and also so that there's enough of it and then at night when
you start to use it, you're using the water, the hot water out of the tank and the hot water
out of the pipes. And then in the morning, the cold water, you know, as you use the water, the
system will replace it with cold water. So as you use hot water, cold water's coming in behind it.
Now, it's not going to mix the cold water and the hot water together to give you warm water.
It's smart enough to do that, but it still requires electricity and it is expensive.
My solution is to use about 200 or 300 feet of coiled black irrigation pipe.
And if you're on my reality check Facebook page, there's already been a discussion of this.
Some people were posting stuff, and that's great.
They beat me to it.
Go to Lowe's or Home Depot or any of your big box stores and get about 200 or 300 feet of black irrigation pipe, coil it up, and leave it in the sun.
You know, YouTube has several good videos that is.
Let's trade this concept.
If you just search, go on YouTube and search, Pex Coil Solar Water Heater, Pex, Papa Echo X-ray, P-E-X, P-E-X, P-E-X, or just Google P-E-X Coil, you will get the idea.
The premises is if you take black plastic tubing, fill it with water, and let it sit in the sun for the few minutes, it heats up.
Then at night, you have about five or ten gallons of hot water to use.
You know, again, conservation kind of thing.
you rinse off, soap up, rinse off.
You don't just use the whole 10 gallons at once.
Or you could run the water through it at a low flow and it will continually heat the water,
although it's not going to get hot.
It's just going to be moderately warm as much as the sun can warm it up.
So, you know, however, in my opinion, this is the best solution for off-grid hot water.
It's silent.
There's no smell.
There's no fuel.
If you make a large enough capacity when you can heat up a lot of water.
I mean, large enough capacity, you could have, you know, a thousand feet of coils on the top of your roof and just have, you know, two or three or four, 200 foot coils of tubing, of black tubing, and, you know, even put it on a black surface or put it inside of a greenhouse of sort so that you're getting as much heat transferred into that water as possible.
And if you have an old water heater, I mean, yeah, an old water heater.
tank, you could dump the water into it, you know, during the day so that it stays warm and then
fill the tubes up and so that then you have the capacity of hot water in the tank as well as hot water
in the coils. And then, you know, seven, eight o'clock at night, everybody gets their bath.
And the water hasn't cooled off so much that you have a cold shower.
Anyway, either way, hopefully, I have now educated you about how to make enough hot water.
And with that, I am done.
convinced you, edit, edit, edit.
And with that, I am done.
Hopefully I have convinced you to the need of having hot water in a grid-down situation
and having a reliable source where we can generate a large quantity of hot water.
You can make it on a pot, on a stove over a fire, but we as humans are going to need
a lot more hot water than what our pots and pans can provide.
Hopefully now you will do your own research to see what option is best for you and yours.
and with that, that's all I have for this show.
As I always say, if you have any questions, comments, or corrections,
hit me up on Facebook or send me an email or on Discord.
On Facebook, look for my Reality Check Studios group and join it.
My icon is a red castle, so you know you have the right one.
My email address is Michael Klein at Hotmail.com.
I always welcome both criticism and applause.
Thanks again for everyone listening to me, drone on and talk about something that I have no idea about.
You all have a good one.
Thank you for listening to the Prepper Broadcasting Network, where we promote self-reliance and independence.
Tune in tomorrow for another great show and visit us at Prepperbroadcasting.com.
